Thousands of Pro-Morsi Demonstrators Take to Streets in Egypt Amid Tightened Security

Thousands of pro-Morsi demonstrators take to streets in Cairo and several provinces decrying Morsi`s ouster and killing of hundreds of protesters last week, army and police forces tighten security at protest sites.

Marches are underway in several parts of Egypt on Friday with thousands taking to the streets protesting the removal of ousted president Mohamed Morsi and the killing of hundreds of Morsi supporters during a security crackdown last week.

Demonstrations marched through the Cairo and Giza districts of Ramsis, Mohandeseen, Kerdassa, Helwan, Haram and Shubra.

The Governorates of Aswan, Suez, Minya and Fayoum also witnessed protests.

Protesters chanted "[Defence Minister Abdel-Fattah] El-Sisi is a traitor" and "It is not about the Brotherhood…it is a war against Islam" .

"El-Sisi is a traitor…Morsi is my president" and "The media are liars…peacefulness in not terrorism," were also among the chants.

Demonstrators carried pictures of Morsi and of those slain during last week`s clashes with police . Widely carried were also the yellow banners with the now well-known "Rabaa hand" showing a four-finger salute symbolizing the violent crackdown on the Rabaa Al-Adawiya Mosque last week, which left more than 700 killed and thousands injured.

Egyptian army and police forces are tightening security at several prominent protest sites in Cairo.

The National Alliance to Support Legitimacy, an Islamist coalition against the ouster of president Mohamed Morsi led by the Muslim Brotherhood, announced that it would stage twenty-eight marches across greater Cairo on Friday departing from major mosques. The demonstrations, dubbed the "Friday of Martyrs," aim to condemn the fall of Brotherhood supporters in recent violence following the police`s deadly crackdown on the Islamist sit-ins last week, leaving over 700 dead.

Army and police forces have spread over the vicinity of Rabaa El-Adawiya Mosque in Nasr City, where the alliance held its main sit-in for six weeks before the dispersal. They have closed off several nearby streets.

They also increased their presence at the nearby defense ministry and the Ittihadeya presidential palace in Heliopolis district, a few kilometres away from Rabaa El-Adawiya.

In addition, army forces have closed off all entrances to Tahrir Square in central Cairo with tanks and barbed wire.

Tahrir has been a site for anti-Brotherhood demonstrations and currently hosts several tents of protesters who opted to defend the area in case Morsi supporters attempt to take over the iconic square.

Meanwhile, the army also closed off Gam`et El-Dowal El-Arabiya Street, a main route in Mohandiseen district, which intersects with the square where Mostafa Mahmoud Mosque is located. Immediately after dispersing the sit-ins last week, Islamist protesters attempted to set up a new sit-in in front of the mosque, but fierce clashes broke out with security forces and the crowd was quickly dispersed.

Three days after the dispersals, in response to violent clashes that followed nationwide, the alliance announced it would hold a week of rallies in protest. However, the turn out across the past week has been relatively small in numbers.

Fourteen governorates, including Cairo, Giza and Alexandria, are under a state-imposed curfew from seven o`clock in the evening to six o`clock in the morning. A one-month long state of emergency was also announced nationwide last week.